Systems Physiology I: Cardiovascular, Respiratory, and Renal
Transcription
Systems Physiology I: Cardiovascular, Respiratory, and Renal
Systems Physiology I: Cardiovascular, Respiratory, and Renal Systems Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Quote of the Day (Week, or Semester) “A mediocre person tells. A good person explains. A superior person demonstrates. A great person inspires others to see for themselves." Harvey Mackay Harvey Mackay (born 1932 in Saint Paul, Minnesota) is a businessman and columnist. Mackay is perhaps best known as the author of five business bestsellers, including Swim With the Sharks (Without Being Eaten Alive), Beware the Naked Man Who Offers You His Shirt and Dig Your Well Before You're Thirsty. He is a nationally syndicated columnist, and one of America's most popular business speakers. He is also founder, Chairman and CEO of Mackay Envelope Corporation, whose story he tells in anecdotes sprinkled throughout his books. Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Organization • Instructors: Rob MacLeod (macleod@cvrti.utah.edu) • TA: Andrew Miller (acmiller015@gmail.com) • Web page: http://www.sci.utah.edu/~macleod/be6000 • Canvas page: https://utah.instructure.com/courses/269693 Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Web Site Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Canvas Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Lecture Syllabus • Cardiac electrophysiology/mechanics – Membrane and cellular structure/function – Action potentials – Cardiac tissue and bioelectricity – Cardiac mechanics, regulation • Cardiovascular structure/function – Vascular system – Hemodynamics, transport, regulation • Respiration – Gases and gas transport – Ventilation – Regulation • Renal function – Osmotic regulation – Renal transport – Regulation Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Lab Syllabus • Sessions: – Dissection of CV system (bovine heart) – Regulation of cardiac function (frog) – Exercise and blood pressure – ECG – Pulmonary function – Simulation • TA: Andrew Miller (acmiller015@gmail.com) Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Schedule Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Resource Material • Class web page : – www.sci.utah.edu/~macleod/be6000 • Text: Eckert Animal Physiology, Randall, Burggren, & French • Notes: available before most lectures on the web site in pdf format. • Study topic list: prepared before each major test • Additional references (see web site): – Human Physiology: An Integrated Approach by Silverthorn – Physiology by Berne and Levy; – Mathematical Physiology by Keener and Sneyd – Cardiovascular Physiology by Mohrman and Heller. Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Labs • Goals: – Put theory into practice – Get exposure to real biological data – Encourage sound analysis and interpretation – Develop/improve writing and organizational skills – Explore Design of Experiments • Guidelines: – Generally two lab days per lab (Friday/Monday, Friday/Tuesday, Wed/Friday) – Sign up for the lab Doodle Poll: see web site – Review lab instructions and associated web sites for Friday – Start of lab time: 12:00 on Friday, 1:00 pm Monday Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Lab Logistics • Lab time: Friday at 12:00 and Monday at 1:00 PM • First lab: Friday, Jan 10 (this week!!) • Lab materials – Camera (one per team) – Tolerant, comfortable clothes Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Lab Reports • • • • • • Writing/presentation is important! Format varies with the lab Emphasis on results and discussion Requirement of clear, logical, concise scientific writing Plentiful feedback (our job) Resubmissions allowed (on first two labs) Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology My Expectations Students should: • Already possess a basic understanding of human physiology, e.g., Human Physiology: in Integrated Approach, by Silverthorn • Already have a working knowledge of MATLAB • Immediately check Canvas: see web site for instructions • Already have previous experience with writing lab reports • Plan to read the text (during the semester) • Plan to read some literature • Ask questions and participate Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Our Deliverables We will offer: • Intermediate level coverage of cardiovascular physiology • Generalized approach to physiological systems • Lab experiences that integrate class material • Design of experiments • Feedback and a chance to act on that feedback • Flexible syllabus based on class interest • Answers to the Why Should We Care? question at any time • Experiment with peer learning • Accessibility: after class and by email are best Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Grading • Exams: 3 * 15% = 45% of total grade – Types of questions • • • • True/false with explanation Describe a mechanism Explain an observation Interpret data • Labs: 30% – 6 labs with written reports, • Semester project: 20% – Written exploration of extreme physiology • Homework: 5% – 2-3 homework assignments – Simulations, calculations Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Death Zone Video Motivation and background for semester project Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Comments from Video Structure Content Approach Message Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Lab Scheduling Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Lab Scheduling Decision Friday Lab: 2:00 Monday Lab: 1:00 Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Lab Scheduling Heather’s reply re BIOEN 4202 Friday sessions: “I haven’t had any students in the past approach me with anything I couldn’t work around, so I don’t anticipate it being an issue the students can’t manage.” Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Lab Planning and Practice Goals Logistics Careful Execution Data Acquisition Before Cleanup Data Processing During Introduction After Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Excellent Photo Example Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology And Another Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Cow Specific Information Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Meanwhile, Back in the Classroom... Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Learning Approach: Problem Solving Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Learning Approach: Motivation By Force? Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Don’t memorize Ask Good Questions! So what are some good questions? Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Learning Approach: Finding Good Questions Scott Sandford, NASA Ann Improb.Res., annual swimsuit issue, 4(2) March/April 1998 Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Peer Learning “Peer learning is based in real work: sharing what one is doing with others, asking for support, questions and answers and feedback.” wiki.sos.wa.gov/PeerLearning Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Plagiarism What is it? 1. To use and pass off as one’s own (the ideas or writings of another). 2. To appropriate for use as one’s own passages or ideas from (another). 3. To put forth as original to oneself the ideas or words of another. Why is it bad? Reputation and fraud The law Fairness Self-delusion www.rbs2.com/plag.pdf Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology How Do We Reconcile? versus Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Why Animal Physiology? Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Why Animal Physiology? Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Why Animal Physiology? Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Why Animal Physiology? • Scientific curiosity – animals can do things humans cannot! • Insights into human physiology – source of experimental models – similarities and differences important to know • Bioengineering strategies – “Bio-based” approach • Commercial/agricultural applications – veterinary medicine – genetically modified/cloned animals Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Physiological Has Central Themes 1.Structure/function relationships 2.Methods of change: Adaptation, acclimatization, and acclimation 3.Homeostasis 4.Conformity and regulation 5.Feedback control systems Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology 1. Structure/Function Relationships • Function follows from structure, e.g., different muscle forms have different function – skeletal – smooth – cardiac • Present across scales Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology 2. Mechanisms of Change Adaptation Optimality Good Enough Dyann Wirth Adaptation • Adaptation – passed by genetic material, slow, not reversible – occur by mutation, selected by environment – can be difficult to determine, must bring survival advantages, e.g., same response to same stress across different species Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology 2. Mechanisms of Change Acclimatization and Acclimation www.aconcaguaexpeditions.com • Acclimatization – change in response to exposure to environment – relatively rapid and reversible – e.g., response to change in altitude • Acclimation – same as acclimatization but induced by investigator Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology 3. Homeostasis • System to remove or attenuate response to external changes • Produces constant internal environment • E.g., body temperature • Effective across scales • Different animals respond differently to same stress Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology 4. Conformity and Regulation • Internal = external • E.g., starfish (salinity) annelid worms (oxygen) Introduction • Internal != external • E.g., crustations (oxygen) mammals (temperature, etc.) Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology 5. Feedback control • Central to all physiology • Mechanism for homeostasis • Positive versus negative feedback • Set point • Gain Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Causality and Teleology • Teleology: – “A thing, process or action is teleological when it is for the sake of an end, i.e., a telos or final cause.” – “The use of ultimate purpose or design as a means of explaining phenomena.” – Avoid this type of thinking in science as we cannot tell purpose. • Example (from lab report): – “One initial observation is that the right lung is much larger than the left lung. This makes sense physiologically since the heart is generally located on the left side of the body; therefore to optimize lung capacity, the right lung has more room inside of the body to grow.” Introduction http://www.answers.com/topic/teleology Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Features of Cardiovascular Physiology (Why engineers might hate physiology) – Blood is thicker than water (it is a suspension of particles) – Blood vessels are not pipes (walls are elastic, contractile) – The heart is a "permissive" pump (follows rather than leads) – Most heart failure is electrical not mechanical in origin (Why engineers should love physiology) – Physiology is physics (just complicated physics) – Homeostasis = control Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Overall Causes of Death Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology World CV Death rates (men) CV Diseases All Causes Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology World CV Death rates (women) All Causes CV Diseases Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology CHD CV Disease Rates: US Rank: Low to High #1: New Mexico #52: New York Utah: #3 Stroke #1: New York #52: S. Carolina Utah: #11 Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology The Updated Trends Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Cardiovascular System Overview • • • • • The plumbing: circulation systems in the body The wiring: cardiac electrophysiology The pump: the heart as a pump The flow: blood and hemodynamics The control: brain/hormonal/local, feedback Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology Cardiovascular System Regulation Arterial Pressure Brain • Goal: adequate flow • Process: pump and flow • Regulation: parallel circuit with valves • Sensors? • Feedback? Aorta Heart Vena Cava Kidney Blood Urine Skeletal muscle Introduction Bioengineering 6000 CV Physiology